Tag: Toronto International Film Festival

  • TIFF: …And ‘The wedding Party’ falls short of expectations

    Last night, the gate opened for the Nigerian contingent to show their stuff to the world, having been hugely represented at the ongoing Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF). But quite disappointingly, the country began her showcase of the eight selected films for the festival’s ‘opportunistic’ platform called City-to-City focus with a noisy film that portrays the awry part of its people.

    That film, ‘The Wedding Party‘, directed by Kemi Adetiba, is definitely not the kind for Toronto or any A-list film festival. Therefore,  its promoters should have known better not to show it to a curious and critical audience at this time of Nollywood redefinition, let alone lead the way for the other seven Nigerian films.

    I don’t know where Kemi Adetiba is coming from, save for her music video background, but that outing for The Wedding Party was like putting her bad foot forward. Same goes for other promoters of the movie who could have saved that commercial-inclined production for some class of the Nigerian audience with sour comic taste.

    Not only is ‘The Wedding Party‘ noisy in the real sense of the word, it falls short of sound quality that further pushes it down the drain. And I think that the producers could have helped the audience with some English subtitle, going by the garbled accent of some cast and an overbearing use of sound track.

    As much as comedies tend to defy some rules of realism in filmmaking, the producers pushed the bar too far by making a clown of the entire cast. A typical Lagos wedding, by the Yoruba and Igbo, must be some hard drug carnival that makes the entire city go crazy. I’m tempted to think that people merely acted themselves in that movie, with a passive directorial input. What more can you get from a star-studded film like ‘The Wedding Party“?

    However, if there were actors who held their own, it would be the likes of R.M.D and Iretiola Doyle, Adesua Etomi and Banky W. The producers could have simply made slapstick of the whole drama, because ‘The Wedding Party‘ does not strike the chord of chaotic decency it tries to portray.

  • Lagos congratulates film directors for toronto film festival selection

    Lagos congratulates film directors for toronto film festival selection

    …Avows readiness to market the Lagos brand globally

    The Lagos State Government has congratulated nine Lagos-based film directors whose latest films will be screened to global audiences at the world-acclaimed Toronto International Film Festival holding in Toronto, Canada between September 8th and 18th 2016.

    The 41st edition of the festival this year is focusing on Lagos State in its City to City, the first African city to be so honored.

    In a press statement signed on Tuesday by the Lagos State Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Mr. Steve Ayorinde, the Toronto International Film Festival will be celebrating the talents and creativity that abound in Lagos with the unprecedented selection of eight new films by Lagos-based filmmakers in the City to City segment and one other film for Industry Special Screening.

    In addition, two outstanding actor/filmmakers, Kunle Afolayan and Genevieve Nnaji were selected to ‘In Conversation With’ (ICW) which will have the two celebrities discuss their works on the world stage.

    “The Lagos State government is happy to confirm the selection of eight Lagos-made feature films at the Toronto International Film Festival coming up in September as well as Mr. Kunle Afolayan’s The CEO, which will enjoy a Special Industry Screening on the 12th of September.

    “We are happy that as the birthplace of Nollywood and the state that is regarded as one of the world’s most productive film locations in the world, Lagos State will be the centre of attraction in Toronto, Canada this year.”

    Ayorinde said as the first African city to be so honoured at the festival, the focus on Lagos in Toronto this year confirms “the arrival of Lagos State on the world stage” and how the global creative community acknowledges the potential that is associated with professionals in the motion picture industry of Lagos State.

    The Commissioner listed the selected films as follows: 76 (directed by Izu Ojukwu), 93 Days (Steve Gukas), The Wedding Party (Kemi Adetiba), The Arbitration ( Niyi Akinmolayan), Taxi Driver ( Daniel T. Oriahi), Okafor’s Law (Omoni Oboli), Just Not Married (Uduak-Obong Patrick), and Green White Green (directed by Abbah T. Makama).

    The statement added that in addition to the selected films, TIFF has also invited two young actors for participation at the newly created Rising Stars Programme at this edition. “OC Ukeje, for his role in The Arbitration and Somkele Iyama for her roles in the three of the films selected – 93 Days, The Arbitration and The Wedding Party.

    The Commissioner said the Lagos State government was pleased that two of the selected films enjoyed the support of the state government during production and that the thrust of all the films will highlight different aspects of lives and historical developments in Lagos and in Nigeria in general.

    “While 76 revisits the political upheaval of 1976 that led to the assassination of the Head of State, General Murtala Muhammed, 93 Days examined the bravery of the late Doctor Stella Adadevoh and the Lagos State Government in combating the dreaded Ebola virus in 2014.

    “We are pleased that filmmakers are exploring themes that are strong enough to attract global attention. The focus on Lagos State this year, therefore, signals the beginning of a rewarding global attention to our creative artists and the inherent potentials in the state as destination of choice for international filmmakers, visitors and investors.

    Ayorinde added that to properly take advantage of the opportunities that featuring at the Toronto film festival brings, the State Government will have a pavilion at the festival, co-host a befitting reception for the Nigerian filmmakers and offer support to the industry delegation. He said that “this falls within the Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s vision to support the arts and creative industry in Lagos State” adding that the time is ripe for the Lagos State brand to engage with the world.

     

  • Nigerians discuss Nollywood in Canada

    Nigerians discuss Nollywood in Canada

    Emotions heightened Sunday afternoon during a panel discussion on the Nigeria’s emerging film industry which took place at the makeshift filmmaker’s lounge in Hyatt Regency, in the ongoing Toronto International Film Festival, Canada.

    The festival witnessed one of the largest gathering of filmmakers, government officials and Nigerians in the Diaspora in recent times, who seized the opportunity of the official selection of Half of a Yellow Sun, a screen adaptation of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Orange Prize-winning novel of the same title to be a part of focus discussion set by the festival organizers.

    Tagged: ‘Nigeria beyond Nollywood’, the one hour panel, anchored by a professor of Film Studies at the Canada’s Capital Varsity; the Carleton University’s Mr.  Aboubakar Sanogo, had filmmaker, Mahmood Ali- Balogun and the team of Half of a Yellow Sun, delivering on their experiences on the movie project.

    The discussion, which was meant to explore the possibility of institutional support, high technology and new business approach to enhance Nollywood’s better global acceptability, soon, turned to an argument on whether or not the model employed by the producers of Half of a Yellow Sun was necessary for Nollywood.

    Ali-Balogun differed with the subject of discussion when he noted that Nollywood remains the generic name for the Nigerian film industry, and that government’s orientation concerning support for the industry has changed; citing examples of the $200 million loan and N3 billion grant by the Federal Government for the entertainment industry in Nigeria.

    But Yewande Sadiku, an investment banker with 17 years experience who raised the funds for Half of a Yellow Sun maintained that there are greater opportunities to be enjoyed by filmmakers if they are willing to get out of their comfort zones of producing mainly for the local market.

    She argued that the business of filmmaking will be respected if Nollywood filmmakers learn to leave the aspect of financing to experts. “Half of a Yellow Sun project chose me because I have the skills that are relevant to get it going,” she said, noting however, that it was tough getting investors to fund the movies, but for her goodwill, popularity of the author and success of the book, which she said has sold more than a million copies and have been translated into 30 languages. “If a book has to be written about the sourcing of finance for this movie, it would be titled ‘ How not to fund a film,’” she joked.

    Sadiku’s position was supported by co-panelists;  Biyi Bandele, the movie director;  Andrea Calderwood, the producer and Kisha Cameron-Dingle, a producer at Completion Films, a body known for funding of short films in Africa.

    While some filmmakers praised the effort of Bank of Industry for supporting the movie and other projects brought to them by filmmakers, they feel that other government agencies need to do more by supporting the intervention policy of the feral government.

    Veteran filmmaker, Igwe Gabosky, did not mince words in attacking some agencies of government that he thinks do not have business being at the festival.

    He thinks the BoI has done well, by approving his loan of N300 million to setup distribution facilities for Nollywood.

    He noted that without a proper distribution and exhibition structure, it would be foolhardy for any agency to invest in movies which have Nigeria as the major distribution window.

    Gabosky is in Toronto as member of a new organisation called Nigerian Entertainment Business Group (NEBG). Other members of that group at the festival include retired banker and Nollywood enthusiast, Charles Igwe and President Association of Nollywood Core Producers, Alex Enyengao

    Other attendees include the Bank of Industry with Uche Nwuka and Promise George as the two delegates, National Film and Video Censors Board (NFVCB) with about 10 delegates, led by the Acting Director General, Ms Patricia Bala and the team from Africa International Film Festival (AFRIFF), comprising four delegates, led by founder of the festival, Chioma Udeh.

    Others are; Ugenyin Kalu, from Nigerian Export-Import (NEXIM) Bank, a staff of Unity Bank, filmmaker Lancelot Imasuen, journalists and some Canada-based Nigerian filmmakers.

    Half of a Yellow Sun is Bamdele’s first feature film. The filmmaker who lives in the UK said he is motivated by the desire for Nigerians to tell their stories rather than have foreigners tell them from their perspective.

    Set in 1960s Nigeria, the story follows the inter-twining lives of several characters before and during the Biafran War between 1967-1970: Ugwu, a thirteen-year-old village boy who was a houseboy for a university professor full of revolutionary zeal; Olanna, the warm, progressive and beautiful daughter of well-to-do city-dwellers; and Richard, a white English ex-patriot who falls in love with Olanna’s twin sister.

    British Hollywood actors Thandie Newton and Chiwetel Ejiofor take on the lead roles of Olanna and the revolutionary Professor Odenigbo, with Anika Noni Rose as Olanna’s sister, Kainene and John Boyega as houseboy Ugwu.

    Joseph Mawle plays the English writer Richard while other notable actors in the cast include Genevieve Nnaji, Gloria Young, Zach Orji, Tina Mba and veteran Nigerian singer/actress, Onyeka Onwenu. The original sound track for the movie was produced by Cobhams Asuquo and singer-songwriter Keziah Jones.

    Half of a Yellow Sun was shot at the Tinapa Film Studios in Calabar, Nigeria and in the United Kingdom.